Author Archive

Transforming Your Yard Into a Garden

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Wendy Weiner

Special contributor to Real Mama, Inc.

front gardenFour years ago I moved to my new home. It’s a typical suburban home found anywhere: grass to the foundational plantings and driveway on the side of the house creating a separation from the neighbor’s yard. Big beautiful shade trees in the back yard offer cooling shade in the summer, and there are a few perennial plants and a lot of creeping English ivy, compliments of one of my neighbor’s.
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What is Permaculture?

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Wendy Weiner

Special Contributor to Real Mama, Inc.

wendy-gardenQuick Facts: “Consciously designed landscapes which mimic the patterns and relationships found in nature, while yielding an abundance of food, fiber and energy for provision of local needs.” People, their buildings and the ways they organize themselves are central to permaculture. Thus the permaculture vision of permanent (sustainable) agriculture has evolved to one of permanent (sustainable) culture. (* David Holmgren, Permaculture Principles & Pathways Beyond Sustainability)

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A Paradigm Shift — Growing a Garden

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Wendy Weiner

Special contributor to Real Mama, Inc.

wendys-garden
Quick Facts:
Tending a vegetable garden was once a common skill in America. Families would grow much of their fresh produce for the year, preparing their own healthful meals and sharing the abundance with neighbors and friends. For several decades gardening fell by the wayside as our country mass produced more and more of its food, and people worked more and cooked less. Today, as the resources of our planet reach their peak, once again, people are looking to become more self-sufficient and are planting their own gardens. They are also sharing their knowledge, their yards and their food within their communities, reaching the more synergistic goal of “self-efficiency”, a state of interdependence among friends and neighbors.

At one time we all had gardening in our blood. Most families kept a garden to provide their own fresh produce for part of the year. Some stored their produce by stocking the root cellar, canning, drying or freezing. Over the years Americans who didn’t live on a farm began to depend more on what the local grocer had to offer and no longer opted for the homegrown. Once we began to depend on the local grocery store we no longer had to worry if we could grow enough to sustain ourselves. As the generations passed, many of the skills were either lost or no longer passed on.
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